In a suit in equity for the rescission of a contract of
purchase, and to recover the moneys paid thereon on the ground that
it was induced by the false and fraudulent representations of the
vendor, if the means of knowledge respecting the matters falsely
represented are equally open to purchaser and vendor, the former is
charged .with knowledge of all that by the use of such means he
could have ascertained, and
a fortiori he is precluded
from rescinding the contract and from recovery of the consideration
money if it appears that he availed himself of those means, and
made investigations, and relied upon the evidences they furnished,
and not upon the representations of the vendor.
Statements by a vendor of real estate to the vendee, made during
the negotiations for the sale, as to his own social and political
position and religious associations are held, even if false, not to
be fraudulent so as to work a rescission of the contract of
sale.
It is no ground for rescinding such a contract that the agents
of the vendors, who had received the full purchase money agreed
upon, misappropriated a part of it.
Page 142 U. S. 44
The Court stated the case as follows:
On February 26, 1879, a tax deed was executed by the Clerk of
the County Court of Upshur County to George Henning and others for
a tract of land supposed to contain 40,000 acres. The grantees in
this tax deed were twenty-two in number, who had entered into a
written agreement on December 11, 1877, to purchase the land at tax
sale in that month. On April 24, 1883, this agreement for the
purchase of this land was executed:
"We, the undersigned, agree to and with George Henning &
Co., and bind ourselves to do certain things, through and with the
committee of said company,
viz., D. D. T Farnsworth,
Jackman Cooper, and P. Thomas, as follows: we agree to pay to said
committee fifteen thousand dollars for a certain tract of 40,000
acres of land, known as the 'Wm. H. Morton Land,' that was sold for
nonpayment of the taxes, and bought by said George Henning and
others, to whom the State of West Virginia made deed,"
etc.,
"one hundred dollars of which sum in hand paid to said
committee; two thousand dollars to be paid to said committee at the
Buckhannon Bank on the 4th of May, 1883; the residue of said
fifteen thousand dollars to be paid at the time of the making of a
deed for said land; said deed to be made within forty days or as
soon thereafter as possible. The deed shall convey all the rights
and title to said land as conveyed by the state in a deed made to
said company, the deed to be made to Joseph Duffner, Charles
Duffner, and Matthew Duffner, the undersigned, with the guaranty
that the said tract of land shall contain at least twenty thousand
acres not legally held by actual settlers within the boundary of
said tract of 40,000 acres; but in the making of the deed for said
land it shall provide that all the actual settlers within boundary
who have been in peaceable possession for ten years, according to
law, and have paid the taxes on their claim or title, shall not be
disturbed by any attempt in law from their boundaries so held by
deed or title; all the rest of said 40,000 acres is to be held by
the undersigned.
Page 142 U. S. 45
Now, if the said D. D. T. Farnsworth, Jackman Cooper, and P.
Thomas shall make or cause to be made to us, the undersigned, a
deed as above stated for said 40,000 acres, we will faithfully
perform our obligations herein made. Witness our hands and seals
this day and year of our Lord, April 24, 1883."
"CHARLES DUFFNER [Seal]"
"JOS. DUFFNER [Seal]"
"MATTHEW DUFFNER [Seal]"
"P.S. We agree also to pay the taxes on said land for the year
1883."
Thereafter a deed was made in pursuance of this agreement. The
deed was dated May 12, 1883, but not in fact delivered until July
14, 1883. It purported to grant "all the rights, title, and
interest vested" in the grantors by the tax deed heretofore
referred to, which was specifically described. It also contained
this provision in reference to settlers on the tract:
"The parties of the first part herein named convey the
above-named 40,000 acres of land to said parties of the second part
herein named, with the provisions that all of the actual settlers
within the boundaries of said survey who have been in peaceable
possession for ten years previous to this date according to law and
having paid all of the taxes on their claim of title to any of said
land shall not be disturbed by any attempt or action in law from
their boundaries so held by them by deed as aforesaid, but all of
the residue of said 40,000 acres is herein conveyed to the parties
of the second part, and held by them, with the guaranty that said
tract or survey of land shall contain at least 20,000 acres not
legally held by actual settlers, as above named and provided for,
within said boundary of 40,000 acres; but if, in case the quantity
of land in said survey should prove to be less than 20,000 acres
after deducting the number of acres legally claimed and held by
actual settlers, as above herein named, then the parties of the
first part, grantors, who now constitute the legal owners of said
tract of land which was sold for the nonpayment
Page 142 U. S. 46
of the taxes due thereon in the name of William H. Morton, are
to refund back to the said Duffners, parties of the second part, in
proportion per acre for any deficiency of land below or less than
20,000 acres in said survey."
On February 12, 1886, Joseph Duffner, who had in fact advanced
all the money for the purchase of this land and who had succeeded
to the rights of his associates in the deed, filed his bill in the
District Court of the United States for the District of West
Virginia setting forth the fact of his purchase and the amount of
money paid and alleging that the purchasers were induced to
purchase through the false and fraudulent representations of the
several grantors, such false and fraudulent representations being
set out in full; also that the tax deed was void, and conveyed no
title to any land by reason of three matters specifically pointed
out, and praying a decree that the several grantors be adjudged to
return to him the moneys by him paid, in proportion to their
several interests as grantors in the conveyance. To this bill the
defendants answered separately. Thereafter, on pleadings and
proofs, the case was submitted to the court, and a decree entered
in favor of the plaintiff in accordance with the prayer of the
bill, setting aside the contract of April, 1883, and adjudging that
the several defendants pay to the plaintiff their proportionate
amounts of the moneys paid by him. The amounts thus decreed against
two of the defendants, Daniel D. T. Farnsworth and Philip Thomas,
being each over $5,000, they have appealed to this Court.
Page 142 U. S. 47
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit for the rescission of a contract of purchase and
to recover the moneys paid thereon on the ground that it was
induced by the false and fraudulent representations of the vendors.
In respect to such an action, it has been laid down by many
authorities that where the means of knowledge respecting the
matters falsely represented are equally open to purchaser and
vendor, the former is charged with knowledge of all that by the use
of such means he could have ascertained. In
Slaughter's Administrator v.
Gerson, 13 Wall. 379,
80 U. S. 383,
this Court said:
"Where the means of knowledge are at hand and equally available
to both parties and the subject of purchase is alike open to their
inspection, if the purchaser does not avail himself of these means
and opportunities, he will not be heard to say that he has been
deceived by the vendor's misrepresentations. If, having eyes, he
will not see matters directly before them where no concealment is
made or attempted, he will not be entitled to favorable
consideration when he complains that he has suffered from his own
voluntary blindness and been misled by overconfidence in the
statements of another. And the same rule obtains when the
complaining party does not rely upon the misrepresentations, but
seeks
Page 142 U. S. 48
from other quarters means of verification of the statements
made, and acts upon the information thus obtained."
See also Southern Development Co. v. Silva,
125 U. S. 247;
Farrar v. Churchill, 135 U. S. 609. In
Ludington v. Renick, 7 W.Va. 273, it was held that
"a party seeking the rescission of a contract on the ground of
misrepresentations must establish the same by clear and
irrefragable evidence, and if it appears that he has resorted to
the proper means of verification, so as to show that he in fact
relied upon his own inquiries, or if the means of investigation and
verification were at hand and his attention drawn to them, relief
will be denied."
In the case of
Attwood v. Small, decided by the House
of Lords, and reported in 6 Cl. & Finn. 232, it is held
that
"if a purchaser, choosing to judge for himself, does not avail
himself of the knowledge or means of knowledge open to him or to
his agents, he cannot be heard to say he was deceived by the
vendor's representations."
And in 2 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, section 892, it is
declared that a party is not justified in relying upon
representations made to him:
"1. when, before entering into the contract or other
transaction, he actually resorts to the proper means of
ascertaining the truth and verifying the statement; 2. when, having
the opportunity of making such examination, he is charged with the
knowledge which he necessarily would have obtained if he had
prosecuted it with diligence; 3. when the representation is
concerning generalities equally within the knowledge, or the means
of acquiring knowledge, possessed by both parties."
But if the neglect to make reasonable examination would preclude
a party from rescinding a contract on the ground of false and
fraudulent representations,
a fortiori is he precluded
when it appears that he did make such examination and relied on the
evidences furnished by such examination, and not upon the
representations.
It becomes necessary now to state some facts appearing in the
record, facts that are undisputed, and coming from the lips of
plaintiff and his witnesses. Matthew Duffner, the son of plaintiff
and one of the three parties in the contract and deed, was in
partnership with a man by the name of Wood.
Page 142 U. S. 49
This partner informed him that he had a cousin, one Colonel
Wood, living near Oakland, Maryland, who had lands for sale. A few
weeks after receiving this information, Duffner called on Colonel
Wood and was shown by him a map of this land, located within a few
miles of Buckhannon, in Upshur County, West Virginia. By
arrangement, the three Duffners met Colonel Wood at Clarksburg and
went with him to Buckhannon with a view of examining the land. Soon
after their arrival, Colonel Wood became intoxicated, and took no
further part in the transaction. While there, they met the two
appellants and Jackman Cooper -- and this was the first interview
or communication between the parties -- and entered into the
contract of April 24, 1883, with them as a committee on behalf of
all the owners. Prior, however, to this, they had gone onto the
land in company with Watson Westfall, who was, or had been for
years, the surveyor of the county, spending the time from Saturday
morning until Tuesday night in going to, examining, and returning
therefrom. After executing this contract, the Duffners returned to
Cleveland. Having been advised that the deed was executed and ready
for delivery, and in July following, this plaintiff, with a lawyer
from Cleveland -- Mr. Fish, a gentleman who had been acting as his
counsel for fifteen or twenty years, a lawyer of experience,
sixty-four years of age -- went to Buckhannon. He took Mr. Fish
with him for the purpose of having him examine the title and the
deed. On arriving at Buckhannon, Mr. Fish proceeded to make such
investigation as he deemed sufficient, and after three days passed
in an examination of the records and a study of the statutes of the
state, he advised Mr. Duffner to take the deed, and on the giving
of such advice Mr. Duffner received the deed and paid the balance
due on the contract. After this, having missed the train, Mr. Fish
remained another day in Buckhannon, and continued his examination
of the records, and on his way home stopped at the state capital to
see if proper returns had been made to the state auditor's office.
The result of all his investigations was satisfactory, and as both
plaintiff and Mr. Fish testify -- and their testimony is
corroborated by many witnesses, and contradicted by none -- it
Page 142 U. S. 50
was after Mr. Fish advised him to take the deed that he took it
and paid his money. But one conclusion can be deduced from these
facts, and that is that the plaintiff did not rely upon any
representations made to him by the defendants, but through his own
counsel made investigation of the title, and purchased on the
strength of that counsel's opinion thereof. Within settled rules,
he is therefore now precluded from rescinding this contract on the
ground of such representations.
But the case does not rest on this alone. Thus far we have
considered only such facts as are disclosed by the testimony of the
plaintiff, his son, and his counsel. Let us look at some of the
testimony produced by the other side. Frederick Brinkman, an
apparently disinterested witness, testifies that he met plaintiff
on his several visits to West Virginia and, hearing from him that
he was coming there to buy land, cautioned him against West
Virginia land titles, calling them "polecat titles," and advised
him before purchasing to consult some of the local lawyers, naming
three or four of them; to which plaintiff replied that he would be
careful, and that before purchasing he would bring his own counsel
from Cleveland, and added that he was a good lawyer, and one in
whom he had confidence. Again, while Mr. Fish was making his
examination of the records in the county office, three or four of
the defendants were present, and some one or more of them said to
him, in the presence of the plaintiff, that some people called
their title a "wildcat title;" and they wanted him to make a full
examination, and be satisfied that it was good, "for they wanted no
after-claps or further trouble about the land thereafter." So we
have not only equal means of knowledge, but also an actual
examination by the purchaser, through his counsel; a completion of
the contract when, and only when, his counsel advises him that the
title is satisfactory; a prior caution to the purchaser that land
titles in West Virginia were doubtful, and his reply that he
proposed to rely upon the advice of his own counsel, and the
further declaration of the defendants to such counsel, in the
presence of the purchaser, before the completion of the contract,
that they
Page 142 U. S. 51
desired a full examination in order that there might be no
after-trouble. Surely if there ever was a case in which the
doctrine of
caveat emptor applies, this is one.
It may be well now to notice the three matters which are alleged
in the bill as invalidating validating the title: First. That there
was no note or record of any kind in the office of the Clerk of the
County Court of Upshur County of the sheriff's report of his sale,
until the 10th day of January, 1878, which was more than ten days
after the sale; which omission, counsel says, has been decided by
the Supreme Court of West Virginia to invalidate a tax deed. But
this was a defect apparent on the records, the very records which
Mr. Fish was examining. Second. That William H. Morton, in whose
name the land was returned delinquent for the nonpayment of the
taxes of 1876, never had any valid title, his only claim of title
resting in a series of fraudulent papers, admitted to record in the
County of Upshur on the 16th day of February, 1876. Then follows a
statement of the instruments in that chain of title, to which the
bill adds:
"From this it will be seen that all of these papers except the
last were admitted to record upon certificates purporting to have
been made on the 24th day of February, 1867, which was Sunday, by
one Frederick Bull, who only goes so far as to certify to the
papers as copies of the papers which were then produced before
him."
But this chain of title, as the bill avers and the testimony
shows, was on the records, and was examined by Mr. Fish, and it
also appears that Mr. Fish noticed that one of these instruments,
at least, thus placed on record was not an original instrument, but
only a copy. So the defect was not only one which could have been
noticed by Mr. Fish, but also, so far as the objection runs to the
record's being of a copy of an instrument, was in fact perceived by
him. Thereafter he examined to see that this tract of land was
listed for that year in the name of Morton only, and concluded
that, as tax proceedings are proceedings
in rem against
the land, they were not vitiated by any defect in the chain of
title to the party in whose name the land was listed. Third. It was
alleged that the title under the tax deed was void because the
tract of land described therein was and is
Page 142 U. S. 52
owned by other persons claiming under and owning by superior
patents. And then the bill sets out some eleven patents, issued
between 1785 and 1793, for large tracts of land, which patents, the
bill alleges, covered and include the tract in controversy. But
these, too, were facts appearing on the public records.
It is worthy of remark here that in the latter part of the
eighteenth century, it was a common practice for the State of
Virginia to make grants of large tracts of lands in the then
unoccupied portions of the state now included in the State of West
Virginia, the boundaries of which grants were often conflicting and
overlapping. Hence arose, under authority of the statutes, a form
of patent known as an "inclusive" grant. Grants of that nature were
before this Court and considered in the cases of
Scott v.
Ratliffe, 5 Pet. 81;
Armstrong
v. Morrill, 14 Wall. 120, and
Halsted v.
Buster, 140 U. S. 273. So
the exact tract of land which any of these patentees actually
acquired could only be determined after surveys, and a comparison
of the dates of the entries, surveys, and patents. And as the
descriptions in tax proceedings followed those in patents and other
deeds -- lands being listed in the names of the owners according to
the system then obtaining in that state -- the same uncertainty of
boundary existed as to lands held by tax titles. But with reference
to all these matters alleged as defects in the title it is enough
to say that they were apparent on the records, were open to the
inspection of plaintiff and his counsel, and as to one of them, at
least, it was a defect first noticed by Mr. Fish, and deemed by him
insufficient to destroy the tax title.
So far as respects the matter of settlers on the land --
settlers having occupied portions long enough to acquire title by
occupancy -- both the contract and the deed give notice of that
fact and make provision therefor. It also appears that the Duffners
made a general examination of the land before the contract was
entered into and spent three nights at the house of Isaac W.
Simons, a settler claiming title by occupancy, who, as he
testifies, notified them of his claim of title. As the plaintiff
after his purchase never caused a survey to be made of the
Page 142 U. S. 53
land and never sought to find out how much of the ground was
occupied by these settlers, it is still an unsettled question how
much of the 40,000 acres described in the tax deed was within the
limits of prior grants or in fact so occupied.
We now pass to a notice of the particular matters of fraud
alleged in the bill, and the first is that the defendants knew that
their title was worthless, and, with this knowledge, deliberately
represented it to be good for the sake of inducing the purchase.
The matters in the testimony which are relied upon to substantiate
this charge are that the title was in fact worthless; that there
was talk in the community to that effect, which had come to the
knowledge of defendants; that such an opinion had been given by a
prominent lawyer at one time a judge of the supreme court of that
state, as was known to them, the presumption from their long
residence in the community that all would have known, and the fact
that some did know, of the existence of these conflicting grants,
and the testimony of Mr. Fleming, a lawyer in Buckhannon, that
these appellants stated to him he might be called upon to advise as
to the title and intimated that an opinion in its favor was desired
and that they would pay him for his services. But as against these
matters, it appears that these defendants were not lawyers, but
farmers and businessmen, not possessing or pretending to possess
that knowledge of law which would enable them to determine as to
the validity of the title; that they advanced not only the money
for the purchase in the first instance, but continued during the
succeeding years and until this sale to pay the taxes, the amount
of taxes thus paid being, as stated by the county clerk, $2,983.82,
and the total amount paid by these defendants in one way and
another toward perfecting their title, according to the testimony
of one of the defendants, being $3,150.67; that they did not
pretend that the title they were selling was other than a tax deed,
and that they indicated in the papers the tax deed on which their
title was based, and referred the purchaser to the records by which
the validity of their title could be determined. While they may
have known, as is generally known, that there is an uncertainty
about a tax title, yet they had confidence enough in it to
invest
Page 142 U. S. 54
their money therein for a series of years, and to invite the
purchaser to an examination of the record evidences thereof. So far
as respects the testimony of Mr. Fleming, the lawyer, it is proper
to say that he does not testify that there was any direct
suggestion to the alleged effect, but simply that he obtained an
impression from the general tone of the conversation, while these
appellants positively deny that there was any suggestion or thought
on their part of anything improper, and say that they simply
notified him that they might be asked to name some local lawyer to
examine the title for the purchaser, and that they should take
pleasure in recommending him. Again, it is charged that these
defendants surrounded this purchaser and his counsel, and succeeded
in preventing them from having conversations with other citizens or
making inquiries of them and ascertaining such facts or reports as
might have been gathered from such inquiries. But any attempt of
this kind is denied by all. It was natural that they should be
interested in making a sale, and that they should do what they
could to show attentions to the purchaser and his counsel, and
should be often with them; but it does not appear that they
hindered them in any way from making such inquiries and
investigations as they desired. On the contrary, their testimony is
that they urged them to make full inquiry and investigation before
consummating the purchase. It is further charged in the bill
that
"in order to induce said plaintiff to accept and confide in the
said representations as to the validity of the said title, and in
order to prevent the said plaintiff from making inquiries in other
directions respecting the same, the said Daniel D. T. Farnsworth at
the time of making the said representations respecting the said
title also represented to the said plaintiff that he, the said
Daniel D. T. Farnsworth, had been Governor of the State of West
Virginia and a member of the senate of the same state, and was at
the time of making such representations the President of a bank,
and the president of a railroad company and a member of the Baptist
Church, and had heretofore built a church edifice, which he pointed
out to the said plaintiff, and that he was not such a man as would
deceive or take advantage of the said plaintiff,
Page 142 U. S. 55
or would have anything to do with titles to land unless they
were good titles."
According to the plaintiff's testimony, it would appear that
these statements were made before the signing of the original
contract; according to Mr. Farnsworth, that while he did make
statements of that character, it was only after the contract was
signed, and while walking about the city with the plaintiff and in
response to inquiries made by him. But further, the testimony of
Mr. Farnsworth is that those matters concerning himself, thus
stated, were true, and there is no suggestion anywhere that they
were not true. If true, they certainly were not false and
fraudulent representations, and, if false, they were not of a
character to invalidate a contract. It would hardly do to hold that
a party was induced into a contract by false and fraudulent
representations because one of the vendors represented that he had
been governor of the state, and was a member of the church, and
president of a bank and a railroad company.
One other matter alone requires notice. It appears that in the
talk preceding the contract of purchase, the committee had named
$20,000 as the price of the land, and had asked a further sum of
$1,500 for their own services, but that the final outcome of the
negotiations was the fixing of $15,000 as the price of the land,
and $6,500 to be paid to these two appellants for their services.
It is enough to say that whatever wrong these appellants were
guilty of in making this change was a wrong to their associates,
and not to the purchaser. It is not a matter he can complain of.
The full amount which he had to pay was the amount they named in
the first instance, to-wit, $21,500, and if, in fraud of the rights
of their associates, they changed the distribution of that sum, it
was a wrong which only the parties injured can take advantage
of.
This is the whole case presented by the record. The vendors
pretended to sell only a tax title. They specially guarded
themselves against any rights of actual settlers. The validity of
their title and the extent of it were matters apparent on the
records and open to the inspection of the purchaser. He did not act
on their representations that the title was good, but
Page 142 U. S. 56
brought his own counsel from home to examine those records, and
acted upon his judgment of the title. The conduct of the defendants
supports their testimony that they believed there was validity to
their title. The particular statements complained of as against one
of these appellants were true in fact and, if not true, were not of
a character to avoid the purchase. The wrong which these two
appellants are specially charged to have been guilty of was a wrong
against their associates, and not against the purchaser, nor one of
which he can take advantage. It follows, therefore, that there was
no such showing made as would justify a court in rescinding the
contract of purchase and decreeing a repayment of the money.
The decree will be reversed, and the case remanded, with
instructions to dismiss the bill as to these appellants.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY did not hear the argument or take part in the
decision of this case.